Wednesday, December 20, 2017

PATRICIA WYATT OF LEWES.

PATRICIA WYATT
LEWES



Little Patricia Wyatt, a Lewes school third grader is having the time of her life being the
heroine of all her classmates. They envy her because she doesn't have to go to school each day and
can keep up with schooling right at home. The eight year old is confined to her bed with rheumatic
fever and faces perhaps two years of inactivity but goes to school each day by “School to Home
Intercommunications” a Bell Telephone system.

Patricia is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. Edward Wyatt of 117 Second Street, Lewes .
Last October a sudden illness, diagnosed at Beebe Hospital as rheumatic fever caused her to need
a long rest period. She was allowed to return home, since her mother was a trained nurse, for her
long convalescence. Her father, a Lewes town commissioner, owns the Wyatt Taxi Service here.

Patricia can sit up in bed and hear everything going on in the classroom at school by flipping
the 'on' button of the telephone gadget beside her bed. When ever the class teacher ask her a question
she can 'answer' so everyone in class can hear her as she presses the “talk key”. Miss Irene Ford,
is the teacher this year.

When school time rolls around, Patricia flips the on switch and the teacher flips the on
switch at school.

The telephone unit was installed in cooperation of Dr. John S. Carlton, director of
State Child Development and Guidance Division.



Source: Salisbury Daily Times, Salisbury, Maryland, February 2, 1953. Abstract by Harrison

Howeth, December 2017.  

No comments:

Post a Comment